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Incredible Birth Defect To Be Corrected By Surgeon


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Baby Born With 2nd Head to Get Surgery

58 minutes ago

By PETER PRENGAMAN, Associated Press Writer

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - A Dominican infant born with a second head will undergo a risky operation Friday to remove the appendage, which has a partially formed brain, ears, eyes and lips.

For a photo and the rest of the story click here:

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid...ads_1&printer=1

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor.../xwa10102041432

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Surgeons Remove Second Head From Baby

1 hour, 4 minutes ago

By PETER PRENGAMAN, Associated Press Writer

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - A team of surgeons performed a rare and risky operation Friday to remove the second head of a Dominican baby — a partially formed twin that threatens the girl's development.

The parents of 7-week-old Rebeca Martinez followed her to the door of the operating room and said a prayer over their baby, holding hands and gently caressing their daughter's head.

"Be strong, Rebeca. May God be with you," 26-year-old Maria Gisela Hiciano, said as she reached for her baby through the bars of the crib.

Led by a Los Angeles-based neurosurgeon, the medical team planned to spend about 13 hours removing Rebeca's second head, which has a partially formed brain, ears, eyes and lips.

The surgery is complicated because the two heads share arteries. Although only partially developed, the mouth on her second head moves when Rebeca is being breast-fed. Tests indicate some activity in her second brain.

Eighteen surgeons, nurses and doctors were to take several rotations to cut off the undeveloped tissue, clip the veins and arteries, and close the skull using a bone graft from another part of Rebeca's body.

By Friday evening, the operation was 90 percent complete, doctors said.

"They have taken out the extra brain and they're closing the cranium," said Dr. Santiago Hazim, medical director of Santo Domingo's Center for Orthopedic Specialties, where the surgery was being performed. "The risks have dropped significantly, but we still can't celebrate."

The operation was critical because the head on top was growing faster than the lower one, said Dr. Jorge Lazareff, the lead brain surgeon and director of pediatric neurosurgery at the University of California at Los Angeles' Mattel Children's Hospital.

Without an operation, he said, "the child would barely be able to lift her head at 3 months old."

Lazareff said the pressure from the second head, attached on top of the first and facing up, would prevent Rebeca's brain from developing.

CURE International, a Lemoyne, Pa.-based charity that funds the orthopedic center and gives medical care to disabled children in developing countries, is paying an estimated $100,000 for the surgery.

The operation had been delayed for about four hours while doctors carefully administered anesthesia.

Rebeca's mother and father Franklin Martinez, 29, waited in a separate room, watching baseball on television and receiving visitors who brought flowers and stuffed animals. Psychologists also visited them.

"When she was born everyone said, 'Wow, two heads,' but to us she was just our baby Rebeca," Martinez told The Associated Press.

Lazareff, who led a team that successfully separated conjoined Guatemalan twin girls in 2002, was leading the operation along with Dr. Benjamin Rivera, a neurosurgeon at the Medical Center of Santo Domingo and the orthopedic center.

Doctors say if the surgery goes well Rebeca won't need physical therapy and will develop as a normal child.

Rebeca was born on Dec. 17 with the undeveloped head of her twin, a condition known as craniopagus parasiticus.

Twins born conjoined at the head are extremely rare, accounting for one of every 2.5 million births. Parasitic twins like Rebeca are even rarer.

Rebeca is the eighth documented case in the world of craniopagus parasiticus, Hazim said.

All the other documented infants died before birth, making it the first known surgery of its kind, according to Lazareff and the other doctors.

Martinez, a tailor, and his wife, who is a supermarket cashier, together make about $200 a month and have two other children, aged 4 and 1.

They say doctors told them Rebeca would be born with a tumor on her head but that none of the prenatal tests showed a second head.

Lazareff has refused to make a prognosis but said earlier this week that Rebeca's chances of survival are good.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid...heads&printer=1

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More penalty lashes with a salty guitar string because you duplicated rainbow's link information. You're getting so many welts and scars on your back from these penalty floggings we're going to have to call you Quasimodo.

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this might sound harsch but I think it's better that this poor child left early. It would be even worst if the child died in 5 years or something. The pain for the parents would be much bigger. Sad story.

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Rainbow posted that story earlier, lol. Doesn't Quasimodo ring a bell with you.....?

Oh, yours disappeared now....

Hmm...I had Yahoo on at the same time I was posting. I hope you/we didnt catch that virus! :wub:

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I agree method. I've never heard of that particular affliction before and I can't imagine any living creature wanting to survive like that.

there was another child in that situation about 200 years ago (not sure about the actual year).

Noone wants to live like that. I remember a statement from the siamese sisters from Iran

Q-what if the operation goes wrong and one of you die?

A-We'd rather die that keep living like this.

They were 35 years together and died last year together.

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